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Dallas County
apartment management.

Multifamily property management across the Dallas metro - corporate-headquarters relocations, sustained in-migration, and no rent control under Texas Local Government Code 214.902.

Dallas County, Texas

The DFW corporate core.

Dallas County is the urban core of the DFW metroplex. The apartment economy runs on two structural drivers. First, the corporate-headquarters relocation pipeline - Toyota North America in Plano, Charles Schwab in Westlake, AT&T in downtown Dallas, plus the broader Fortune 500 footprint - produces a steady professional and executive tenant base across Uptown, Bishop Arts, and Deep Ellum. Second, sustained domestic in-migration from California, New York, and Illinois, partly driven by Texas’s lack of state income tax.

Regulatory framing is straightforward. No rent control - Texas Local Government Code 214.902 preempts city and county ordinances. No statewide just-cause-eviction requirement. Tenancies run under Texas Property Code Chapter 92. No state income tax on rental income.

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City We Serve

Our Dallas County market.

Dallas County FAQs

What apartment owners ask
about Dallas County.

We focus on multifamily properties inside the City of Dallas and the immediately adjacent submarkets. The single Dallas County city page on this site covers Dallas specifically. Major DFW submarkets like Frisco and Plano sit in Collin County (just north of Dallas County) - for owners with multifamily properties in those secondary markets, contact us to discuss footprint.

No. Texas Local Government Code 214.902 preempts cities and counties from enacting rent control ordinances. Dallas County has none, the City of Dallas has none, and there is no annual percentage cap on rent increases for multifamily properties anywhere in the county.

Two structural drivers. First, the corporate-headquarters relocation pipeline - Toyota North America in Plano, Charles Schwab in Westlake, AT&T in downtown Dallas, plus the broader Fortune 500 footprint - produces a steady professional and executive tenant base. Second, sustained domestic in-migration from California, New York, and Illinois, driven partly by Texas’s lack of state income tax. Together they support deep apartment demand across the urban core, the Uptown corridor, and the broader DFW metro.

Yes. We work with the Dallas Housing Authority on Housing Choice Voucher (Section 8) placements. We handle annual HQS inspections, HAP contract administration, and the rent-reasonableness comparables the housing authority requires.

No. NextGen Properties manages multifamily rental properties only. Single-family rentals, individually held condos, and short-term rentals are outside our footprint.

Own a multifamily property
in Dallas County?

Call 949-392-8666 or request a free Dallas County apartment management consultation.